In the Nanjing Massacre, disarmed Chinese soldiers of the Kuomintang Army were killed by Japanese troops in the suburbs of Nanjing with their hands tied behind their backs. They were then thrown into a pond, which was filled with the blood of more than 300 corpses. After the massacre, Japanese soldiers threw the corpses into ponds and rivers, burned them, or buried them to conceal the massacre.
In the Upper Xinhe area of Nanjing, the bodies of prisoners of war and fleeing civilians littered the fields and rivers of blood could be seen. After arresting hundreds of people, the Japanese censored the Chinese one by one, all of whom were considered soldiers of the Kuomintang Army, about 300 or more, were taken out and shot dead by machine guns, and their bodies were thrown into a pond, and at the Shuiximen there was a five-hole bridge, with corpses filling two bridge holes. The city of Nanjing was filled with corpses, and the bodies of many of the victims drifted down the flowing Yangtze River.
During the Sino-Japanese War, Chinese bodies littered the streets of Nanjing in eastern China after the massacre of Chinese citizens by the Japanese army. The Nanjing Massacre was the most brutal and barbaric of all the atrocities committed by the Japanese military throughout their occupation of China during the Sino-Japanese War, which began on December 13, 1937, when the Japanese invaded and occupied Nanjing for the first time. About six weeks of destruction, looting, and massacres broke out, planned, organized, and deliberately carried out by the Japanese military. More than 300,000 Chinese, including defenseless civilians and unarmed soldiers, were killed, and countless rapes, looting, and arson were suggested. Looting and mass executions in Nanjing led to looting, rape, murder, and mayhem within Nanjing City.
Hundreds more disarmed Kuomintang soldiers were taken out of the Nanjing area to be shot dead. The road to Xiawan in Nanjing was turned into a field littered with the wreckage of KMT military equipment and corpses. The Nanjing Ministry of Communications was torched by the Kuomintang troops, and the Changmen Gate in Nanjing was shelled. Outside the Changmen are piles of Chinese corpses. The Japanese military would not clear away the dead Chinese. The Red Swastika Society also did not raise its hand because it was forbidden to dispose of the corpses. Chinese soldiers disarmed by the Japanese forces were executed here and there. Outside the barracks of the Nanjing War Ministry, Chinese soldiers were executed with machine guns.
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